Authors of Bill Coddling Polluters Get $ from Manufacturers

Share:

Republican lawmakers are pushing a bill that would give businesses that commit pollution violations up to four times longer to correct the problem.
Authors of Bill Coddling Polluters Get $ from Manufacturers

April 27 , 2017

Republican lawmakers are pushing a bill that would give businesses that commit pollution violations up to four times longer to correct the problem.

The measure, Assembly Bill 264, would allow businesses that self-report their pollution violations to have 180 days to fix most violations, and up to 360 days to correct violations if pollution prevention equipment needs to be modified. Currently, businesses that self-report pollution violations by participating in the state’s voluntary environmental compliance audit program have 90 days to correct violations.

The proposal also eliminates the public notification and comment period concerning the violator’s timetable to correct the problem. The bill also requires the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and the Department of Justice to consider leniency in pursuing court action and penalties in cases involving small businesses that commit minor violations.

State law allows businesses to reduce their liability for environmental violations by enrolling in the 2004 program, voluntarily auditing their performance, reporting the results to the state, and correcting the violations. The law prevents businesses from using the program to avoid penalties for known or serious pollution violations.

Jacque’s top contributors from the manufacturing sector since January 2010 are Robert and Patricia Kern, of Waukesha, owners of Generac Corp.; John and Lisa Dykema, of De Pere, owners of Campbell Wrapper Corp.; and Karl Schmidt, of Green Bay, president of Belmark Inc. Each of the couples and Schmidt contributed $1,000 to Jacque.

Stroebel, who was first elected to the legislature in 2011, has received $9,050 through 2016 from manufacturers, which is also one of his top special interest contributors. Stroebel’s top contributors since January 2011 among manufacturers are Frank Stangl, of West Bend, co-owner of Weimer Bearing and Transmission, and Randall Groth, of Cedarburg, owner of Master Wholesale and Vending Supply, who each gave him $2,000.

Since 2011 when Republicans won control of the legislature and the governor’s office, the DNR and the Justice Department have sought penalties from polluters less frequently. Fines paid by polluters have gotten smaller and also fell to a 30-year low in 2015.

Wisconsin Democracy Campaign

Wisconsin Democracy Campaign is working for a real democracy that allows the common good to prevail over narrow interests. We track the money in state politics and fight for campaign finance and other democracy reforms. WDC is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, and charitable contributions supporting our work are fully tax deductible when you itemize.